Neumann Jan, Guimaraes Julio B, Heilmeier Ursula, Joseph Gabby B, Nevitt Michael C, McCulloch Charles E, Link Thomas M
Musculoskeletal Quantitative Imaging Research Group, Department of Radiology & Biomedical Imaging, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Skeletal Radiol. 2019 Jun;48(6):919-930. doi: 10.1007/s00256-018-3088-0. Epub 2018 Oct 24.
To investigate whether subjects with diabetes show accelerated knee joint structural degeneration over 4 years compared to diabetes-free controls.
Two hundred forty-four participants with diabetes were selected from the Osteoarthritis Initiative cohort and matched with 244 diabetes-free controls. 3.0-T MRI scans of the right knee were obtained at baseline and 4-year follow-up. Evaluation of structural knee abnormalities was performed using the Whole-Organ Resonance Imaging Scoring system (WORMS). Linear regression analysis was conducted to compare structural temporal changes in each compartment, as well as the mean across all compartments by diabetes status.
Study groups were similar in age (63.0 vs. 63.3 years, p = 0.73), body mass index (31.5 vs. 31.0 kg/m, p = 0.21), sex (female 52.0 vs. 52.9%, p = 0.85) and radiographic Kellgren/Lawrence score distribution (p = 0.99). Structural degeneration was significantly worse in the knees of diabetics with an increase in the overall WORMS sum score (delta WORMS [95% CI]: 4.87 [4.17, 5.57], vs. 3.23 [2.60, 3.85] p = 0.001). Moreover, diabetics showed a greater increase in cartilage lesions in the global knee (p < 0.001), but also separately in the patella, lateral tibia, and both femoral compartments (lowest p value; p = 0.001). Furthermore, diabetics showed also a greater increase in meniscus lesion score, in both the medial (p = 0.01) and lateral meniscus (p = 0.01).
Diabetics exhibited a significantly greater increase in cartilage and meniscus lesions when compared to diabetes-free controls over 4 years. Overall, our findings suggest that diabetics exhibit a stronger deterioration of knee structure and are therefore potentially at higher risk for developing knee OA.
研究与无糖尿病对照组相比,糖尿病患者在4年时间里膝关节结构退变是否加速。
从骨关节炎倡议队列中选取244例糖尿病患者,并与244例无糖尿病对照组进行匹配。在基线和4年随访时对右膝进行3.0-T磁共振成像扫描。使用全器官磁共振成像评分系统(WORMS)对膝关节结构异常进行评估。进行线性回归分析,以比较每个关节腔的结构随时间的变化,以及按糖尿病状态划分的所有关节腔的平均值。
研究组在年龄(63.0岁对63.3岁,p = 0.73)、体重指数(31.5对31.0kg/m²,p = 0.21)、性别(女性52.0%对52.9%,p = 0.85)和放射学Kellgren/Lawrence评分分布(p = 0.99)方面相似。糖尿病患者膝关节的结构退变明显更严重,WORMS总分增加(WORMS变化值[95%CI]:4.87[4.17, 5.57],对3.23[2.60, 3.85],p = 0.001)。此外,糖尿病患者全膝关节软骨损伤增加更明显(p < 0.001),单独在髌骨、外侧胫骨和两个股骨关节腔也是如此(最低p值;p = 0.001)。此外,糖尿病患者内侧半月板(p = 0.01)和外侧半月板(p = 0.01)的半月板损伤评分增加也更明显。
与无糖尿病对照组相比,糖尿病患者在4年中软骨和半月板损伤增加明显更多。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明糖尿病患者膝关节结构退变更严重,因此患膝关节骨关节炎的风险可能更高。